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  • New Antarctic Seabed Sonar Images Reveal Clues To Sea-Level Rise

    New Antarctic Seabed Sonar Images Reveal Clues To Sea-Level Rise

    ScienceDaily (May 5, 2009) — Motorway-sized troughs and channels carved into Antarctica’s continental shelves by glaciers thousands of years ago could help scientists to predict future sea-level rise, according to a report in the May issue of the journal Geology.

    Using sonar technology from onboard ships, scientists from British Antarctic Survey (BAS) and the German Alfred Wegener Institute (AWI) captured the most extensive, continuous set of images of the seafloor around the Amundsen Sea embayment ever taken. This region is a major drain point of the West Antarctic Ice Sheet (WAIS) and considered by some scientists to be the most likely site for the initiation of major ice sheet collapse.

    The sonar images reveal an ‘imprint’ of the Antarctic ice sheet as it was at the end of the last ice age around 10 thousand years ago. The extent of ice covering the continent was much larger than it is today. The seabed troughs and channels that are now exposed provide new clues about the speed and flow of the ice sheet. They indicate that the controlling mechanisms that move ice towards the coast and into the sea are more complex than previously thought.

    Lead author Rob Larter from British Antarctic Survey said, “One of the greatest uncertainties for predicting future sea-level rise is Antarctica’s likely contribution. It is very important for scientists and our society to understand fully how polar ice flows into the sea. Indeed, this issue was highlighted in 2007 by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC). Our research tells us more about how the ice sheet responded to warming at the end of the last ice age, and how processes at the ice sheet bed controlled its flow. This is a big step toward understanding of how the ice sheets are likely to respond to future warming.’

    Background

    The area of the Amundsen Sea embayment surveyed was 9950 km2. In the western Amundsen Sea embayment three 17-39 km wide troughs extend seaward from the modern ice shelf front. This is roughly with width of the English Channel. Individual streamlined features carved into the seabed are about as wide as a motorway.

    Ice sheet

    The Antarctic ice sheet retreated to near its present limit around 10 thousand years ago. It is the layer of ice up to 5000 m thick covering the Antarctic continent. It is formed from snow falling in the interior of the Antarctic which compacts into ice. The ice sheet slowly moves towards the coast, eventually breaking away as icebergs which gradually melt into the sea.

    The ice sheet covering East Antarctica is very stable, because it lies on rock that is above sea level and is thought unlikely to collapse. The West Antarctic is less stable, because it sits on rock below sea level.

    Ice shelf

    An ice shelf is a thick (100-1000 m), floating platform of ice that forms where a glacier or ice sheet flows down to a coastline and onto the ocean surface. Ice shelves are found in Antarctica, Greenland and Canada only.

    Glacier

    Just as rivers collect water and allow it to flow downhill a glacier is actually a “river” of ice. A glacier flows much more slowly than river. Rivers of ice within ice sheets account for most of the drainage into the oceans.

    Continental shelf

    The relatively shallow (generally up to 200 meters) seabed surrounding a continent where the depth gradually increases before it plunges into the deep ocean. Around Antarctica the continental shelf is up to 1600 m deep as a result of millions of years of glacial erosion. The deepest parts of the Antarctic continental shelf are near the present ice margin and depths generally decrease offshore.

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    Story Source:

    The above story is reprinted from materials provided by British Antarctic Survey.

    Note: Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please contact the source cited above.


    Journal Reference:

    1. Larter et al. Subglacial bedforms reveal complex basal regime in a zone of paleo-ice stream convergence, Amundsen Sea embayment, West Antarctica. Geology, 2009; 37 (5): 411 DOI: 10.1130/G25505A.1

    APA

    MLA

    British Antarctic Survey (2009, May 5). New Antarctic Seabed Sonar Images Reveal Clues To Sea-level Rise. ScienceDaily. Retrieved February 19, 2012, from http://www.sciencedaily.com­ /releases/2009/05/090505072502.htm

    Note: If no author is given, the source is cited instead.

    Disclaimer: Views expressed in this article do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

  • How Transport Minister Gladys Berejiklian can spend $ 18m without adding a single train

    A case of mission impossible, out of the frying pan into the fire. Don’t expect any significant improvements from this lot in the foreseeable future.

    Neville

    How Transport Minister Gladys Berejiklian can spend $18m without adding a single train

    0

    NSW Transport Minister Gladys Berejiklian. Picture: Justin Lloyd Source: The Daily Telegraph

    TRANSPORT minister Gladys Berejiklian has spent almost $18 million on private consultants in her first 10 months of office – without adding a single new train or bus service.

    While the minister has yet to deliver on her promise to add another 135 express services to the city from western Sydney and the Central Coast, she has managed to pay private contractors up to $1.8 million a month to tell her what’s wrong with the state’s public transport system.

    Winners in the outsourcing bonanza include managing consulting firm Booz and Company, which is collecting $9.8 million from the government. This includes $6.3 million to design and deliver a reform program for RailCorp and $2.8 million to provide “transition expertise and change management support” to the Transport Department.

    Another company, Parsons Brinckerhoff, collected $271,000 for six months’ work analysing commuter transport needs and data collection.

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    The government has also engaged a number of firms to undertake “community relations services” to support projects.

    But Ms Berejiklian defended the spending, saying the state government had launched crucial, once-in-a-generation reform, including a reform of RailCorp and the creation of integrated transport authority Transport for NSW.

    She said the government was “comprehensively reforming the transport system” and they required “independent, expert advice” to ensure the new organisations were efficient and effective.

     

    2 comments on this story

  • Nuclear reports

    News 8 new results for DANGER TO US NUCLEAR PLANTS
    Nuclear Regulatory Commission says accident models could be amiss
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    By Mike M. Ahlers, CNN Washington (CNN) — The Nuclear Regulatory Commission has asked 11 nuclear power plants for information about the computer models they use to test different accident scenarios, saying those models may underestimate how much
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    The Japan Times
    Hill suggested that Australians and Japanese cooperate on ending the use of uranium and nuclear power. “The Japanese people have been subjected to a great deal of propaganda for many decades that nuclear power is safe. But now they know the danger of
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    DC-Security-Threat-Arrest
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    The Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) has asked 11 nuclear power plants for information about the computer models they use to test different accident scenarios. The NRC wants to look into whether those models may underestimate how much nuclear fuel
    See all stories on this topic »
    Cameron could ask Sarkozy for a steer on how to make UK industry stronger
    The Guardian
    Rolls-Royce, one of our industrial jewels, will earn up to £400m by helping France’s Areva build four nuclear reactors on British soil for its compatriot EDF. But the deal looks about as balanced as Monsieur Hulot on a unicycling holiday.
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    Wolf Creek Nuclear Station still shutdown over 1 month after loss of off-site
    Enformable
    This caused the switchyard to become de-energized, which removed the plant’s connection to the electrical power grid. This is an especially precarious position for a nuclear plant, as the offsite power that is supplied to the nuclear power station is
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    to the Fukushima nuclear plant,” Dapeng Zhao, a geophysics professor at Tohoku University and lead author of the study, told The Daily Beast. Zhao said he had submitted the study to the Japanese government and warned them of the impending danger.
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  • SWEARING VIDEO”S RELEASE UNUSUAL

    sADLY THE DETAILS ON THE ITEM BELOW APPEAR TO HAVE BEEN BLOCKED, THIS APPEARED IN TODAY’S sUNDAY tELEGRAPH. sHOWS rUDD UP IN A VERY BAD LIGHT.

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    LABOR’S leadership battle escalates, with Kevin Rudd suggesting video of himself swearing was held in the PM’s office or department.

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  • Linking human evolution and climate change

    Science News

    … from universities, journals, and other research organizations

    Linking Human Evolution and Climate Change

    ScienceDaily (Feb. 17, 2012) — It’s not a take on climate change we often hear about. But Mark Collard, a Simon Fraser University Canada Research Chair and professor of archaeology, will talk about how climate change impacts human evolution at the world’s largest science fair.

    The 2012 American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) conference runs Feb. 16 to 20 at the Vancouver Convention Centre in downtown Vancouver.

    Collard will give a talk called Environmental drivers of technological evolution in small-scale populations during a seminar called Climate Change and Human Evolution: Problems and Prospects.

    Collard will argue, “we need to better understand the ways that climate and related environmental variables have affected historically-documented small-scale societies before we can accurately track the impact of climate change on human evolution.”

    The director of SFU’s Human Evolutionary Studies program, Collard will also present data that his research team is analyzing. Their research suggests environmental variation significantly influenced the number and intricacy of food-gathering tools that historical hunter-gatherers made.

    “The basic pattern,” explains Collard, “is that people living in harsh, risky environments, such as the Arctic, produced and used many more complex tools than people living in less harsh and risky environments, such as tropical rainforests. Food gathering tools make up a large part of known early archaeological records. So our findings are providing us with a way to track the impact of climate change on human evolution.”

    Collard can relate his findings to current thinking about the impact of climate change on the dispersal of modern humans globally and the evolution of their cultures during the last couple of hundred thousand years. Our species, Homo sapiens, evolved during that time period.

    As a discussant in another seminar, Constructing a Human World Fit for Nature, Collard will look for common themes in six speakers’ presentations. They will flesh out the research behind an evolutionary conundrum that is the central theme of this seminar.

    The conundrum — while evolution has enabled ancestral hominins (humans) to adapt well to diverse ecological niches, modern humans are now transforming local ecosystems and the global climate at the peril of their own existence.

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  • GEOSCIENTISTS USE NUMERICAL MODEL TO BETTER FORECAST FORCES BEHIND EARTHQUAKES

    Geoscientists use numerical model to better forecast forces behind earthquakes

    Posted: 17 Feb 2012 07:10 AM PST

    Researchers have devised a numerical model to help explain the linkage between earthquakes and the powerful forces that cause them. Their findings hold implications for long-term forecasting of earthquakes.
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